Connecticut Injury Spinal Cord Attorney

Spinal cord injury incidence is estimated to be around 40 cases per million people in the U.S., though there have not been any studies in overall spinal cord injury in the U.S. since 1970.  Based on the estimations, there are around 11,000 new cases of spinal cord injury each year.  Today the number of people in the U.S. who currently has spinal cord injury is around 183,000 and 230,000 people. 

Spinal cord injury affects young adults the most, with 55% of spinal cord injury sufferers being between 16-30.  The average age of a spinal cord injury is 32.1, but there has been an increase in the mean age at time of injury since 1973.  Around eighty percent of spinal cord injury patients are male, with the ratio of injury four to one male to female. 

Spinal cord injury is most often caused by vehicle crashes, followed by violence, falls, sports, and other injuries.  Cases of spinal cord injury as a result of violence and falls have increased since 1973, with motor vehicle and sports spinal cord injury decreasing. 

Spinal cord injury that results in paraplegia has a 40% average return rate to work, while 30% of spinal cord injury that results in quadriplegia returns to work.  Paraplegia is spinal cord injury that is usually located as a lower injury and affects just the legs and lower parts of the body.  Quadriplegia is a spinal cord injury that affects the spine in the cervical or neck level that can cause paralysis in both the arms and the legs.  Both forms of spinal cord injury are sometimes caused as a direct result of a personal injury.

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